Life As Practice: Making Every Moment Count
Thursday, March 21, 2019
7:00pm – 9:00pm
Our Dharma practice is a living thing that can be expressed
in every aspect of our lives. Whether awakened or not, our
own innate wisdom lies at the cutting edge of our present
state of consciousness.
Aren’t we actually more conscious than we often express in
our daily living?
So why is it that we choose to manifest anything other than
our full potential? Due to choosing to live lesser lives
than we could, we experience an inner dissatisfaction. Allow
this very dissatisfaction to fuel a process of stepping out
of the safety of our own confines as we begin to embrace a
more conscious life.
Amy J. Miller (Ven. Lobsang Chodren) first encountered Tibetan Buddhism in the spring of 1987 during a course at
Kopan Monastery in Nepal.
Since then, she has spent a great deal of time engaged in meditation retreats, study, teaching, and Buddhist center management throughout the world.
Prior to meeting the Dharma, Amy was a political fundraiser in Washington, DC
and also worked for Mother Jones Magazine in San Francisco, California.
Amy also trained as an emotional support hospice counselor
during the peak of the AIDS epidemic in San Francisco and
offers courses and retreats on death and dying and
end-of-life care.
From 1992-1995, Amy
managed Tse Chen Ling
Center in San Francisco, California. She then served as
Director of Vajrapani
Institute, also in California, from 1995–2004. From
1998–2002, she was also the Manager of the Lawudo Retreat
Fund (which supports the center in which the sacred cave of
Kyabje Zopa Rinpoche is located) in the Mt. Everest region
of Nepal. In 2004, after resigning as Director, Amy
completed a seven-month solitary retreat at Vajrapani. For
most of 2005 and 2006, she organized international teaching
tours for and traveled with the esteemed Tibetan Buddhist
master, Ven. Kirti Tsenshab Rinpoche until Rinpoche’s death
in 2006. Amy then became a touring teacher for
the FPMT. From 2008–2014,
Amy was Director
of Milarepa
Center in Barnet, Vermont.
Amy has also had the good fortune to visit Tibet in 1987 and
again in 2001 as a pilgrimage leader for the Institute of
Noetic Science in the United States. She has also led
pilgrimages to India, Nepal, Bhutan, Darjeeling, and Sikkim
for the Liberation Prison Project and Milarepa Center.
The next trip Ven. Amy is leading is a pilgrimage in the
spring of 2020 to Lawudo Retreat Center in the Mount Everest
region of Nepal. A 3-day retreat will be included along
with a visit to Lama Zopa Rinpoche's birthplace.
Amy was ordained as a Buddhist nun in June 2000 by the great
Tibetan master, Ven. Choden Rinpoche, and has been teaching
extensively since 1992. Her teaching style emphasizes a
practical approach to integrating Buddhist philosophy into
everyday life. She is happy to help people connect with
meditation and mindfulness in an effort to gain a refreshing
perspective on normally stressful living.
Amy’s courses and retreats focus on establishing and
maintaining a meditation and mindfulness practice, death and
dying, overcoming anxiety and depression, battling
addiction, dealing with self-esteem issues, and cultivating
compassion and loving kindness. She is also often involved
in leading a variety of retreats.
Amy is the co-author of Buddhism in a Nutshell
and a contributor to Living in the Path,
a series of online courses produced by FPMT.
Based in the United States, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
Amy teaches and leads retreats and pilgrimages around the
world. Her teaching schedule and other information can be
found at AmyMiller.com.
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